After you show them a few photoshopped images of them in a sleeping bag and in the forest,
Dictatorship would be the answer because in a dictatorship the government and all the decisions that are made by one person.
Answer: Stanley Milgram
Explanation: As Stanley Milgram himself stated, the essence of obedience to authority is when a person begins to perceive himself as a tool to fulfil the wishes of the authority, not his own wishes, so he sees all his actions and consequences of these actions as a result of the action of authority, not as a result of his will and responsibility. Milgram based his experiment on the conflict that arises between the state of obedience and the conscience of a person who subordinated to authority. The essence of the experiment concerned the responsibility of those who committed genocide during WWII, who claimed to have been merely obedient, i.e executing the orders of superiors, and based their defense on this claim.
This begs the question of whether or not they were complicit in the genocide.
The experiment was performed with pairs of participants where one was a "student" and the other was a "teacher", and where the student was connected to an electroshock electrode. Each time a student would give a wrong answer, the teacher would activate electricity through the electrodes and the student would experience an electric shock. With each wrong answer, the teacher would increase the level of electric shock. There are also some moderation in the experiment, such as a student would make a mistake on purpose, etc.
The conclusion is that ordinary people are generally willing to kill people, even if they are innocent in order to execute the orders of superiors, recognised as authority. It is considered that when it comes to authority, all its orders are justified and legal. So it is moral and proper to follow the orders of authority, whatever it may be.
Answer:
The Mississippians made waddle and daub homes and organized them around central plazas.
Explanation:
The Mississippian society was a communal group of native Americans that exist in round Eastern, Southeastern, and Midwestern, United States. They relied a lot on basic use of things that they can found around their environment to sustain their life. They use Wattle and daub which they made by combining wet soil, clay, sand, and straw as a structure for their homes.
They arranged their homes in a way that allow social interaction to flourish between their tribes members. They organized their hut surrounding a central plazas where they conduct their ceremonies or other forms of social gathering.
<span>The structures that share a common evolutionary origin is called Homologous.
</span>